But
that golden touch was missing the last time the Rebels (16-11, 7-7 SEC) saw
Alabama. A 4-for-15 shooting night was his SEC low as the Tide took a 67-64
win. Defenders were in his face all night as Henderson scored 14 points — well
below his 19.5 average.

His
late 3-pointer cut the Alabama lead to two after the game appeared over. A shot
at redemption comes Wednesday night as Alabama (11-16, 5-9 SEC) travels to
Oxford for a 7 p.m. tipoff. The Tide hasn't won at Ole Miss since 2008-09 and
lost 13 of the last 16 trips to Tad Smith Coliseum.

"He's
a great player, obviously, and a great shooter," Alabama coach Anthony Grant said. "He's got the
ability to make tough shots. We were fortunate some of the shots didn't go in.
But I thought our guys did a really good job of being aware and alert to make
it as difficult as possible for him to get open looks."

The
Tide had defenders contesting shots all night and made him uncomfortable from
the very beginning. Henderson went crashing into the scores tables off the
opening tip in a scrum for the ball.

He
took just one shot from inside the arch and went 4 of 14 beyond it. His .286
percentage from 3-point range was his third-worst in February play behind
Tennessee (.222). For the season, Henderson is shooting 36.7 percent from
3-point range (108 of 294).

Nationally,
nobody makes more than his 4.5 3-pointers a game. A streak of at least one in
the last 60 games is a school record. One more Wednesday would give
him the SEC record for a shooter who has made as many as 10 in a game this
season.

"I've
never seen anybody — while I've been playing — take the shots that he takes,"
Alabama's leading scorer Trevor Releford
said. But, I mean, he's good at making them. He shoots and his team is
confident in him, so I guess he has to keep shooting."

Henderson's
394 attempts from 3-point range set an NCAA record last year.